Hawkeye is going to shoot an arrow at Thanos, only for it to do nothing. Hawkeye will respond with one of “I don’t know what I expected” or “I’ve made a huge mistake.”
Hawkeye is going to shoot an arrow at Thanos, only for it to do nothing. Hawkeye will respond with one of “I don’t know what I expected” or “I’ve made a huge mistake.”
The stair car was in Civil War already
I do wonder if DC caught wind of Marvel looking to bring The Eternals into the next phase of the MCU and decided to beat them to the Jack Kirby punch by announcing The New Gods.
Hawkeye’s going to arrive somewhere in the Bluth Stair Car.
“There’s a few surprises coming. I would say that Arrested Development fans should keep their eyes open in this one.”
I just rewatched Last Jedi, and while I found some flaws more glaring the second time round (seriously, those bombers), overall I think it holds up pretty well - including more controversial bits like the “twists” and Luke’s epic showdown.
The supernova destroyed Romulus the planet, not the entire empire. I think a race so advanced could still recover from the destruction of their homeplanet... he’ll, it’d be a nice set up for a new series having to cope with a Romulan Empire in disarray and full of faction trying to take power.
A post-Voyager show would basically have to pretend the Romulans don’t exist, since the supernova that destroys Romulus happened in a Paramount film.
It’s just another indication to me that this series should been set post-Voyager, then they could just do whatever they wanted without constraints regarding TOS designs.
They really did do a fantastic job on it—it ‘reads’ as the original Enterprise very clearly, in spite of the differences. (Which, as they say, can be handwaved with the whole ‘refit’ thing if you really care; it’s no more substantial a change than the (huge) transformation between TOS and TMP, anyway.)
He could really stand to toss in a #7: for the love of god, WORK ON PACING. The art in White Knight has been delightful, but the narrative has been a mess and a half.
Aside from the cool vehicle in every issue, these are the rules DC needs to adopt and live by.
I mean, except she started out as a mutant in the comics. All that magic shit was added later to varying degrees of confusing.
Two things about that: first, Wanda’s powers aren’t actually occult - she’s much more akin to a mutant (or an Inhuman) than a sorcerer, by the terms established in the MCU; second, I thought that *Doctor Strange* successfully implied a lot more than it showed with respect to the magic of the Sorcerer Supreme and her…
From a general audience perspective, those four abilities are simple enough that anyone can understand them. Also, diving headlong into the world of magic requires an explanation of its limitations, weaknesses, and rules of use. Otherwise it’s too easy for it to become a plot device that can be used willy-nilly.
I don’t think the movie could have gotten away with it more than once, but as an introduction to her character, it was absolutely brilliant.
Part of the issue is, as Doctor Strange demonstrated, Marvel still doesn’t want to lean into the mystical and occult. The sorcerers of Kamar-Taj only seemed to have four abilities: summoning weapons, the mirror dimension, astral projection and a device-enabled teleportation. Where were the candles, pentagrams, spells…
Though her telekinesis has grown much stronger, her psionic abilities have all but disappeared at this point, despite the fact that there have been multiple moments when she could have used them to diffuse dangerous situations.
Dan Falcone is a very very good autocorrect
it’s Gotham, so why the hell not.